Birth of Ōjin and Jingū's Identity According to the
Kiki, Empress Jingū gave birth to a baby boy whom she named
Homutawake (aka
Emperor Ōjin) following her return from Korean conquest. The legend alleges that her son was conceived but unborn when Emperor Chūai died. As three more years would pass before
Homutawake was finally born, this claim appears to be mythical and symbolic rather than real. Scholar
William George Aston has suggested that this claim was misinterpreted, and instead refers to a period of less than nine months containing three "years" (some seasons), e.g. three
harvests. If Ōjin was an actual historical figure then historians have proposed that he ruled later than attested years of 270 to 310 AD. Jingū's identity has since been questioned by medieval and modern scholars who have put forward different theories.
Kitabatake Chikafusa (1293–1354) and
Arai Hakuseki (1657–1725) asserted that she was actually the shaman-queen
Himiko. The kiki does not include any mentions of
Queen Himiko, and the circumstances under which these books were written is a matter of unending debate. Even if such a person was known to the authors of the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, they may have intentionally decided not to include her. However, they
do include imperial-family shamans identified with her which include Jingū. Modern scholars such as
Naitō Torajirō have stated that Jingū was actually
Yamatohime-no-mikoto and that Wa armies obtained control of southern Korea. Yamatohime-no-Mikoto supposedly founded the
Ise Shrine in tribute to the sun-goddess
Amaterasu. While historian Higo Kazuo suggested that she is a daughter of
Emperor Kōrei (Yamatototohimomosohime-no-Mikoto). According to world-renowned linguist and Japanese language expert
Alexander Vovin, due to
Amenohiboko being of Korean origin, Jingū and her son and successor,
Emperor Ōjin might have been native speakers of the
Korean language.
Korean Invasion (42–562 AD). Both the and the give accounts of how Okinaga-Tarashi (Jingū) led an army to invade a "promised land" (sometimes interpreted as lands on the
Korean Peninsula). The states that Jingū conquered a region in southern Korea in the 3rd century AD naming it "Mimana". One of the main proponents of this theory was Japanese scholar Suematsu Yasukazu, who in 1949 proposed that Mimana was a Japanese colony on the Korean peninsula that existed from the 3rd until the 6th century. In 1883, a memorial
stele for the tomb of King
Gwanggaeto (374 – 413) of
Goguryeo was discovered and hence named the
Gwanggaeto Stele. The stele contained insight into the
Silla–Goguryeo and Paekche–Kaya–Wa War, a major battle that took place in Korea and the first international conflict Japan participated in. An issue arose though, when the inscriptions describing events during the king's reign were found to be in bad condition with portions illegible. At the center of the disagreement is the "sinmyo passage" of year 391 as it can be interpreted in multiple ways. Korean scholars maintain that it states the Goguryeo subjugated Baekje and Silla, while Japanese scholars have traditionally interpreted that
Wa had at one time subjugated Baekje and Silla. The stele soon caught the interest of the
Imperial Japanese Army General Staff Office, who obtained a
rubbed copy from its member Kageaki Sakō in 1884. They particularly became intrigued over the passage describing the king's military campaigns for the
sinmyo in 391 AD. Additional research was done by some officers in the Japanese army and navy, and the rubbed copy was later published in 1889. The interpretation was made by Japanese scholars at the time that the "Wa" had occupied and controlled the Korean Peninsula. The legends of Empress Jingū's conquest of Korea could have then been used by Imperial Japan as reasoning for their
annexation of Korea in 1910 as "restoring" unity between the two countries. As it was, imperialists had already used this historical claim to justify expansion into the Korean Peninsula. According to the book "
From Paekchae Korea to the Origin of Yamato Japan", the Japanese had misinterpreted the
Gwanggaeto Stele. The Stele was a tribute to a Korean king, but because of a lack of correct punctuation, the writing can be translated in 4 different ways. This same Stele can also be interpreted as saying Korea crossed
the strait and forced Japan into subjugation, depending on where the sentence is punctuated. An investigation done by the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in 2006 suggested that the inscription could also be interpreted as "Silla and Baekje were
dependent states of Yamato Japan." The imperialist reasoning for occupation eventually led to an emotional repulsion from Jingu after World War II had ended as she had symbolized Japan's
nationalistic foreign policy. Historian Chizuko Allen notes that while these feelings are understandable, they are not academically justifiable. The overall popularity of the Jingū theory has been declining since the 1970s due to concerns raised about available evidence. ==Legacy==